this quote is exactly what Jamie said to me when we met |
Watched: 08/04/2019
Format: Noir Alley on TCM on DVR
Viewing: First
Decade: 1940's
There's a surprising number of movies about or including the work of "trucking" in this category we call "noir". I suppose it makes sense given the world of people operating mostly alone, moving from place to place by day and night. Add in the shadiness of transportation companies and both the folks sending and receiving goods, and it's fertile soil for drama. And it's not like people like myself who've never ridden in a truck are oblivious to truckstop shenanigans.
But who would have thought moving produce would lead to excellent noir drama? But, at it's core, Thieves' Highway (1949), which is 100% about moving produce, contains a lot of what I think of when I ponder what comprises the "noir movement". Characters in over their head pursuing goals due to hubris or lust (this one has both), a disaffection with the status quo and everyman status, a woman on the make pulling the wool over some schmuck's eyes... it's all there. Plus a heavy played by Lee J. Cobb and a morally gray protagonist played by Richard Conte.